EVGA sits at the top of Crocs Shoes' similarity graph at 0.75 — a PC hardware brand leading the neighbor set for a footwear label, with no other footwear brand appearing in the top 10.
The shape is two-peak. EVGA (0.75) forms one pole, drawing from the technology subcategory; Roman Atwood (0.72), a comedian, forms the other. Between them, the top 10 resolves into a mix of brands and influencers that spans technology (Cooler Master at 0.69), food (Slim Jim at 0.71), fashion (PacSun at 0.70), and lifestyle/reality personalities (Logan Paul at 0.68, Jake Paul at 0.68). The subcategory breakdown across the top 10 shows no single dominant kind: technology brands, comedians, food brands, fashion brands, and a B2B brand (Turtle Beach at 0.69) all appear. The two peaks — PC hardware and a comedian — are not thematically linked to footwear, which makes the bridge between them the structural finding: Crocs' audience shape is pulled simultaneously toward a gaming-adjacent tech crowd and a creator-comedy crowd, with food and fashion brands filling the middle ground.
That two-cluster pull suggests an audience whose composition is defined less by product category than by a specific cultural register that gaming hardware, snack brands, and creator personalities all happen to share.